English
English
Español
Français

Sign Up for Our E-News!

Join over 18,000 other roofers who get the Week in Roofing for a recap of this week's best industry posts!

Sign Up
Equipter - Sidebar - $200 Rebate 2
AEP Span - Sidebar - Rollformer -  March
Roofle - Sidebar Ad - RoofQuote Pro
GCMC-Podcast-WinTraining-Sidebar-2
Leap - Sidebar - LeapPay - Feb 24
Malco Tools - Sidebar Ad - Metal Benders
RoofersCoffeeShop - Where The Industry Meets!
English
English
Español
Français

WSRCA Contractors Counsel: Legal Talk - Arbitration Agreement 

arbitration-legal-wscra-roofing
February 4, 2018 at 2:14 p.m.

Featuring Legal Advisor: Kenneth S. Grossbart, Law Offices of Abdulaziz, Grossbart & Rudman 

WSRCA has written before regarding the concept of arbitration vs. litigation. Arbitrating disputes is very common and arbitration clauses are found in all types of different situations. Arbitration clauses are very common in construction-related contracts as well as employment-related contracts. Arbitration is favored by the courts and if there is an arbitration clause contained in a contract, the court more often than not will enforce the arbitration clause and require that the parties arbitrate their disputes as oppose to litigating their disputes in the court system.  

A recent California Appellate[1] case addresses the validity of an arbitration clause that was contained in an employment agreement. Maya Baxter was employed by AssetMark Investment Services, Inc. Genworth North acquired AssetMark. Genworth required that Ms. Baxter sign an arbitration agreement. The arbitration agreement required that all employment disputes be resolved according to Genworth Alternative Dispute Resolution guidelines. At a later date, Genworth eliminated Ms. Baxter job position and as a result terminated her employment. Ms. Baxter sued Genworth for wrongful termination alleging Genworth fired her because of her race. Genworth filed a motion to compel arbitration pursuant to the arbitration clause contained within the employment contract however the court denied Genworth’s motion on the grounds that the arbitration agreement was procedurally and substantively unconscionable. Click here to continue reading.  

Not a WSRCA member? Join today. 

[1] The holding of this case would no doubt be the same in other States. 



Comments

There are currently no comments here.

Leave a Reply

Commenting is only accessible to RCS users.

Have an account? Login to leave a comment!


Sign In
Cotney Consulting Group - Banner Ad - COO On Demand
English
English
Español
Français

Sign Up for Our E-News!

Join over 18,000 other roofers who get the Week in Roofing for a recap of this week's best industry posts!

Sign Up
ABC Supply - Sidebar Ad - Solar Distribution
The GLO Group - Sidebar Ad - FEBRUARY Option2-Optimized
CRRC - Annual Meeting Registration 2024 = Sidebar Ad
Estimating Edge - Sidebar Ad - Industry Collaboration Means Contractor Success (Podcast With Duro-Last)
SRS - Sidebar Ad - SRS Para Latinos
Project Map It - Side Bar - Digital Portfolio